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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A truly helpful read
I picked up Alternative Energy For Dummies to learn a bit more about hybrid and electric vehicles before I took myself to the car lots and invested. I've used Dummies before to help educate myself on other topics and always got what I was expecting--but this book really surprised me! I found the author did an excellent job of explaining everything from the pros and cons...
Published on June 21, 2009 by earthlover12

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5 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Easy Reading Low Level Descriptions of Alternative Energy
I am a professional engineer with degrees in mechanical and nuclear engineering. I specialize in energy systems for building heating, cooling, and lighting. I have forty years of work experience. This book with twenty-three chapters and 362 pages covers pretty much the full range of alternative energy options that are commercially available or nearly so for consumers. The...
Published on October 12, 2009 by David Gurgel


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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A truly helpful read, June 21, 2009
I picked up Alternative Energy For Dummies to learn a bit more about hybrid and electric vehicles before I took myself to the car lots and invested. I've used Dummies before to help educate myself on other topics and always got what I was expecting--but this book really surprised me! I found the author did an excellent job of explaining everything from the pros and cons of flex fuel, bio-diesel, and other alternative fuel cars as well as the ins and outs of their environmental, political, and social impact so that I could make the best decision for my life and conscience. I highly recommend.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Informative Page-turner, June 26, 2009
By 
Lloyd Long (Newburgh, IN United States) - See all my reviews
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Several months ago I read an interesting National Geographic article on ethanol. I learned how Brazil's motor vehicles run on ethanol, and how expensive it is to produce ethanol from corn.

But where could I find a book covering the salient points on hydrogen fuel cells, coal, diesel engines, nuclear power, solar cells, maglev trains, wind power, geothermal heating, hybrid-electric vehicles, natural gas, and hydropower? And how does each energy source affect global warming and pollution?

Alternative Energy for Dummies discusses all these topics and more in a very readable fashion and at an affordable price. I read the book from cover to cover.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Energy Basics - Surprisingly Comprehensive, October 1, 2010
I was expecting the usual hodge podge of alternative energy, but this book delves deeper into the meaning of energy, and the fundamental problems inherent in all energy processes. This is not a rah rah book, but a sober analysis of the problems facing alternative energy, along with realistic solutions. Realism will solve the green dilemma, not partisanship and wishful thinking.
Highly recommended if you want a comprehensive viewpoint of energy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Basics on Alternative Energy, September 12, 2010
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As a 'green' thinker, I was looking for some ideas as to how to reduce my dependencies on the utilities and energy providers. I had some preconceived notions as to what was available, but really did not know the advantages or disadvantages of the choices.

The author does a great job producing content that can be scanned for items of interest without requiring that you read the book cover to cover. Each of the alternative energy options are explored, with pros and cons, estimated pricing options, and a good comparitive summary.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Intelligent and Interesting Perspective, June 10, 2009
Alternative Energy For Dummies is a thoughtful and intelligent look at the current state of affairs and future possibilities presented by each of the alternatives to our current reliance on fossil fuels. Far from a polemic expousing *the* solution, DeGunther has produced a book that clearly explores the pros and cons of each alternative -- including nuclear power -- from an environmental, social, political, and financial perspective. Not your standard how-to type book from the Dummies, but a winner nonetheless.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Alternate energy, February 24, 2010
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This is a very informative book. I may not do much of it but any energy savings is good for me and the planet.
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5 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Easy Reading Low Level Descriptions of Alternative Energy, October 12, 2009
By 
David Gurgel (Roseland, New Jersey United States) - See all my reviews
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I am a professional engineer with degrees in mechanical and nuclear engineering. I specialize in energy systems for building heating, cooling, and lighting. I have forty years of work experience. This book with twenty-three chapters and 362 pages covers pretty much the full range of alternative energy options that are commercially available or nearly so for consumers. The technical level seems to me about what one would expect for articles in Parade, the Sunday newspaper supplement. Diagrams are few and very simple. (There is nothing wrong with writing for this level of reader.)

Certainly a qualitative discussion of how alternative systems work and what advantages they bring is helpful, but even an interested high school physics student would be looking for more technical content. The book's cover has as the first objective learning to "evaluate the various forms of alternative energy," but evaluation (a comparison of alternatives for example) requires thermodynamic and other technical facts and energy and system cost data far beyond those presented in this book.

After reading this book you will be able to describe in general terms (but certainly not engineering terms) the various alternatives; but you will have little basis for comparisons and selections.

The book has many technical mistakes. For example, the book states, "According to Carnot's law, these smaller power generating machines can never achieve the efficiencies of the massive power plants..." He is speaking here of the Carnot thermodynamic cycle; but that "law" says nothing at all about the size of the system. Carnot (French engineer, 1796 - 1832) found that the theoretical efficiency of an engine operating on the Carnot thermodynamic cycle depends only on the temperatures of the hot and cold reservoirs.

Describing a nuclear reactor the books says, "so there is a need to constantly keep feeding in new uranium material in order to keep the consistent, steady flow of energy that is desired from a nuclear reactor." Nuclear reactors powering electrical generating stations or naval vessels control the power output by raising and lowering neutron-absorbing control rods. New nuclear material is added only during refueling, which take place every year or two while the reactor is shut down.

The book states that steam is produced in a nuclear power plant in "the boiler (this is similar to the boilers used for fossil fuels.) The steam in a nuclear plant is produced in a steam generator that is far different in design than a fossil fuel boiler.

The book states, "Some reactors don't allow the water to boil; they keep it under high pressure and use that pressure to spin the turbine." In every common reactor system, the water that cools the reactor in the end produces steam. For example high pressure water that goes through the reactor in a pressurized water reactor turns lower pressure water in a separate circuit into steam in the steam generator, which is just a big water to water heat exchanger. All turbines that drive generators in reactor plants are steam turbines.

All of us must start with simple descriptions of new things. But one can not stop there if one wants to make accurate decisions. It is not common sense or higher moral values that drive innovation, but rigorous and often difficult engineering together with a knowledge of the economics of energy markets and knowledge of systems installation costs and operating costs.






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1 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Required an Editor, February 28, 2010
By 
Gregg Lowney (Tempe, AZ United States) - See all my reviews
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The book is very sloppy in both content and style. There were paragraphs that I had to read seven or eight times to try and figure out what part of the message the author left out. There are "facts" included in the text that don't even pass the giggle test. It appears there are many key words that are missing, little clues that might indicate a number represents "millions" of tons, and not tons. Of course the correct answer might be "billions", the text offers no clue.

The author begins the book by stating that he will be "neutral" on the issue of anthropogenic global warming, and then throughout the book takes every opportunity to link alternative energy to AGW -- focusing on carbon emissions, which he always refers to as "greehouse gases".

I love the DUMMIES series, and have well over a dozen in my library. This is the first one that really disappointed me. A decent editor with knowledge of the subject could have fixed it.


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Alternative Energy For Dummies
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